PDF Financial Management Service - U.S. Department of the Treasury

Financial Management Service

Mission Statement To provide central payment services to Federal Program Agencies (FPAs), operate the federal government's collections and deposit systems, provide government-wide accounting and reporting services, and manage the collection of delinquent debt.

Program Summary by Appropriations Account

Dollars in Thousands

Appropriation

FY 2006 FY 2007 FY 2007

President's

Salaries and Expenses

Enacted

Budget

CR-rate

Payments

$144,135 $147,358 $147,130

Collections

16,931

17,396

17,367

Debt Collection

10,162

5,250

5,250

Government-wide

Accounting and Reporting

62,653

63,650

63,545

Total Appropriated Resources $233,881 $233,654 $233,292

Request $146,465

19,869 0

FY 2008 $ from

CR-rate ($665) 2,502 (5,250)

68,857 $235,191

5,312 $1,899

% from CR-rate -0.45% 14.41% -100.00%

8.36% 0.81%

FY 2008 Priorities ? Provide federal payments timely and accurately and continue to move toward an all-

electronic Treasury for payments.

? Provide timely collection of federal government receipts, at the lowest cost, and continue to move toward an all-electronic Treasury.

? Maximize collection of government delinquent debt by providing efficient and effective centralized debt collection services.

? Issue accurate, accessible, and timely financial reports and improve the compilation process and audit opinion on the Financial Report of the U.S. Government.

Table of Contents

Section 1 ? Purpose ........................................................................................................... 2 1A ? Description of Bureau Vision and Priorities .......................................................... 2 1B ? Program History and Future Outlook..................................................................... 3

Section 2 ? Budget Adjustments and Appropriation Language................................... 6 2.1 ? Budget Adjustments Table..................................................................................... 6 2A ? Budget Increases and Decreases Description......................................................... 6 2.2 ? Operating Levels Table........................................................................................ 10 2B ? Appropriation Language ...................................................................................... 11 2B ? Permanent, Indefinite Appropriations .................................................................. 11 2.3 ? Permanent, Indefinite Appropriations Table........................................................ 12 2C ? Legislative Proposals............................................................................................ 12

Section 3 ? Budget and Performance Plan ................................................................... 13 3.1 ? Appropriation Detail Table .................................................................................. 13 3A ? Payments ............................................................................................................. 13 3.2.1 ? Payments Budget and Performance Plan .......................................................... 15 3B ? Collections........................................................................................................... 16 3.2.2 ? Collections Budget and Performance Plan ....................................................... 17 3C ? Debt Collection ................................................................................................... 18 3.2.3 ? Debt Collection Budget and Performance Plan ................................................ 19 3D ? Government-wide Accounting and Reporting .................................................... 20 3.2.4 ? Government-wide Accounting and Reporting Budget and Performance Plan . 21

Section 4 ? Supporting Materials .................................................................................. 22 4.1 ? Human Resources Table ...................................................................................... 22 4A ? Human Capital Strategy Description ................................................................... 22 4.2 ? Summary of IT Resources Table ......................................................................... 25 4B ? Information Technology Strategy ........................................................................ 26 4.3 ? PART Evaluation Table....................................................................................... 27

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Section 1 ? Purpose

1A ? Description of Bureau Vision and Priorities The Financial Management Service (FMS) plays a key role in supporting the Department of the Treasury's strategic goal of managing the United States Government's finances effectively by operating as the financial manager and principal fiscal agent for the federal government. This role includes managing the nation's finances by collecting money due to the United States, making its payments and performing central accounting functions.

As the government's financial manager, FMS oversees a daily cash flow in excess of $50 billion, disbursing 85 percent of the federal government's payments, including income tax refunds, Social Security benefits, veterans' benefits and other federal payments to individuals and businesses. FMS also administers the world's largest collection system, collecting approximately $2.9 trillion in FY 2006. It also provides cash management guidance to Federal Program Agencies (FPAs), maintains the government's accounting books and compiles and publishes government-wide financial information used to monitor the government's financial status. Finally, it serves as the government's central debt collection agency for delinquent non-tax debt.

The Strategic Goals of FMS are:

? Provide federal payments timely and accurately, and move toward an all-electronic Treasury for payments.

? Provide timely collection of federal government receipts, at the lowest cost, through an all-electronic Treasury.

? Maximize collection of government delinquent debt by providing efficient and effective centralized debt collection services.

? Produce accurate, accessible, and timely government-wide financial information and reports which contribute to improved quality of the nation's financial decision making.

? Facilitate the achievement of a clean audit opinion on the Financial Report of the U.S. Government through FMS' internal operations and support to government agencies.

? Establish policies and processes to facilitate the integration of e-commerce technologies into FMS' business programs and infrastructure.

The total resources required to support FMS activities for FY 2008 are $450,370,000 including $235,191,000 from direct appropriations and $215,179,000 from offsetting collections and reimbursable agreements.

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1B ? Program History and Future Outlook FMS provides critical services to millions of United States taxpayers and other customers. It embodies Treasury's leadership strategy to create value for the American people, provide responsible and effective stewardship over the government's finances, and focus on quality service results and innovation. History and future outlook by program are as follows:

Payments The Payments program develops and implements federal payment policy and procedures, issues and distributes payments, promotes the use of electronics in the payment process, and assists agencies in converting payments from paper checks to Electronic Funds Transfer (EFT). This includes controlling and providing financial integrity to the payments process through reconciliation, accounting, and claims activities. In FY 2006, FMS issued over 964 million non-Defense payments worth $1.5 trillion to a wide variety of recipients, such as those who receive Social Security benefits, IRS tax refunds and veteran's benefits. Seventy-seven percent of all payments disbursed were via direct deposit.

Streamlining the payments processes while continually investing in state-of-the-art technology is integral in processing payments accurately, timely, and more safely and securely for the taxpayer. In FY 2008, FMS will continue to expand the use of electronic media to deliver federal payments. This helps provide a safer, more secure and more reliable method of payment for recipients, and decreases the number of paper checks issued, which minimizes costs and inefficiencies associated with the non-electronic delivery of benefits.

Collections The Collections program collects revenues needed to operate the federal government through the effective management of the government's collections infrastructure. In FY 2006, FMS collected approximately $2.9 trillion through a network of more than 9,000 financial institutions and 79 percent of the dollars FMS collected was done so electronically. Dollar revenue collected in FY 2006 exceeded those collected in FY 2005 by 10 percent. The most important program that supports electronic collections is the Electronic Federal Tax Payment System (EFTPS). EFTPS is a tax payment system that offers all businesses and individuals the convenience of making their federal tax payments electronically 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, instead of using checks. In FY 2006, taxpayers paid $1.9 trillion using EFTPS, up 16 percent from FY 2005, and the number of payments to the government rose 11 percent to 80.4 million.

In FY 2008, FMS will continue to provide electronic collection mechanisms that use the most advanced and secure collection technologies and are flexible enough to accommodate the varying needs and technical sophistication of all taxpayers and FPAs. FMS will direct its EFTPS efforts to financial institutions that process paper tax coupons as well as the tax practitioner community and small businesses to further expand the use of EFTPS. FMS will also assist agencies in converting collections from paper to

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electronic media by converting checks to electronic payments at the point of receipt and truncating paper remittances and invoices by imaging those documents. Security oversight efforts will increase at financial agent processing facilities and banking institutions as a way to proactively identify security control weaknesses and to detect and deter fraud, waste, theft and unauthorized access associated with the collection of government remittances and protection of sensitive information.

Debt Collection The Debt Collection program recovers delinquent government and child support debt by providing centralized debt collection, oversight, and operational services to FPAs and states as required by the Debt Collection Improvement Act of 1996 (DCIA) and related legislation.

In FY 2006, FMS collected a record $3.34 billion in delinquent debt, including $1.59 billion in past due child support, $1.23 billion in federal non-tax debt, and more than $520 million in federal tax levies and state tax debt offsets. Debt referrals from creditor agencies were at 95 percent of eligible debt at the end of FY 2006. As a result of continued improvements to the program, collections have steadily increased to more than $27.7 billion since the enactment of the DCIA in 1996. In calendar year 2006, IRS referred an additional $47 billion of tax debts for continuous levy, a 25 percent increase from calendar year 2005.

In FY 2008, FMS will continue to focus on incorporating all non-Treasury disbursed salary and vendor payments into FMS' offset program for collecting delinquent debt. By FY 2008, Integrated FedDebt will combine the Cross-Servicing program and the Treasury Offset Program (TOP) into one system. This will reduce redundancies, improve data integrity, and provide direct on-line access to agencies. FMS will also continue to roll out Debt Check, FMS' on-line program used to help agencies bar delinquent debtors from obtaining new loans or loan guarantees.

Government-wide Accounting and Reporting The Government-wide Accounting and Reporting program maintains the federal government's books and accounts for its monetary assets and liabilities by operating and overseeing the government's central accounting and reporting system. For the third consecutive year, FMS released the Financial Report of the United States Government (FR) 75 days after the fiscal year-end. The FR presents a picture of government-wide finances that complements the traditional federal government budget information. It is invaluable when assessing the long-term impact of the government's policy decisions and the timely availability of this additional information is critical to a fully informed budget process. To complement and support the accelerated release of the FR, Treasury continues to release the Monthly Treasury Statement (the monthly public source of budgetary results) on the eighth workday of each month. With this release schedule, agency financial managers are better able to verify and use the data in their own reports.

In FY 2008, FMS will continue to revamp government-wide accounting processes to provide more useful and reliable financial information on a regular basis. FMS is

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